Claude Jarman Jr in 'The Yearling' Photo | MGM/Photofest
English

Claude Jarman Jr, young star of 'The Yearling' passes away

Jarman was 90 when he died in his sleep of natural causes at his Marin County home in Kentfield, California.

ANI

Claude Jarman Jr., who received a Juvenile Academy Award for his heart-tugging performance as the boy who adopts an orphaned fawn in the 1946 MGM classic The Yearling, has passed away.

Jarman was 90 when he breathed his last recently. His wife Katie told The Hollywood Reporter that Claude Jarman Jr. died in his sleep of natural causes at his Marin County home in Kentfield, California.

In films released in 1949, Jarman "starred with Jeanette MacDonald in the Lassie movie The Sun Comes Up, played the brother of a rancher on the run (Robert Sterling) in Roughshod and reteamed with Yearling director Clarence Brown to portray a youngster out to prove the innocence of a Black man in Intruder in the Dust, based on the William Faulkner novel and filmed in Oxford, Mississippi."

At the 1947 Oscars, Jarman was presented with his Juvenile Academy Award from Shirley Temple at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles. He was the seventh youngster to get the miniature trophy, 12 years after Temple was the first.

Jarman also produced a 1972 documentary about music promoter Bill Graham and the Fillmore Auditorium and acted one last time in the 1978-79 NBC miniseries Centennial.

His book, My Life and the Final Days of Hollywood, was published in 2018.

He is survived by his wife, his children, Claude III, Murray, Elizabeth, Vanessa, Natalie, Sarah and Charlotte, and eight grandchildren.

LIVE | 2026 Assembly Elections: Polling begins in Assam, Kerala and Puducherry

Centre tells SC adultery, same-sex rulings based on ‘constitutional morality’ not good law

Iran closes Strait of Hormuz again following Israeli strikes on Lebanon

Trump’s ‘epic fury’ hands blow to long-haul truckers in India

‘Anti-Brahminism is an outdated ideology’: TVK treasurer P Venkataramanan

SCROLL FOR NEXT